Nittel-Nacht
Nittel-Nacht (Birth Night) is celebrated at the start of Kalenda to commemorate the compilation of the Evangelion by Judaic Authorities in the late 80sCE in a bid to fight Armilos by splitting-off Notzrim from Israel into a new community for Hasidei Umot HaOlam practicing the religion of the Evangelion (Judaism for Children). This was the original Jewish Christian project on which Christianity was later based. The Notzrim called this project Pavlut. The Teliya telling the story of this event is recited by the head of the house on this night often over a game of Trumps to remind us how and why the project was established.
The antagonists in this story are Dositheus (Ye.Sh.U) and his followers (the Notzrim). A Trickster also features in the Tale. The Protagonists in this story are the Apostles especially Jude and Simon Clopas while others like Paul are also mentioned.
In Yiddish folk culture, Simon is attributed the role of Hakham Elijah, a gift-bringer while Dositheus (Ye.Sh.U) fulfils the role of a Krampus-like figure used to encourage children to behave and said to wander through the sewers on this night. It is said that his followers can be identified as those who whine concerning this night.
A popular name in Yiddish culture for girls born on this night is Natalia or Natalie.
For centuries, an international network of the most repugnant kind of antisemites (also in Academia where some of whom even pretend to be Jews) have inverted the story to present Dositheus as Yeshua Mintzaret and make its Judeo-centrism appear like an attack on the authors of the Evangelion.
A false etymology given for the night is that Nittel comes from a Hebrew word for a hanged man because the word Teliya means Hanging. However, the first problem is that the name in that case would be Teliya-Nacht. The second problem with that case is that if a Hebrew phrase it should be Hebrew Lailah Teliya instead. The third problem is that this is more like a Children's game than an official Holiday for Jews hence it would not be given a name in the Holy Tongue. Finally, no Hebrew speakers would ever call their daughters a name derived from Hanged Man. The etymology is a false friend but an interesting pun nonetheless.